The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 26, 1920, Page 6

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Newspaper Fo terprine = Asn. and United Prem Service The Seattle Star Dy malt, out of city, §9e per month; 2 montha, $1.60; € months, 3, Im the State of Warhingtom Outahte of the state T5e $4.0 for € montha or ¥ 4 year, By carrier, olty, FANNIE HURST n Fannie Furst, @ well known writer e Today's Heat Bet—That it will fin-| recently has come into newspaper no eee aacevered that It was “FAt" | tee by announcing her marriage to) PRINTERS’ INK AND HEAUTH who killed Carranza ct | Jacques 8. Danielson, a pianist and| Somewhere, sometime, someone gente ¥ - © rage observation that the componer, There no newspaper | Made the nag t yg lees ar 8: judicial use of printers’ ink was as The Boy and His Job ||| The Consumers’ Turn City couneil might as well ma’ letter from Samuel FE. Mieming, | The ultimate force that controls prices ts beginning | treet car faren a di That's hdw| story, of course, in an ordinary mar useful as medicine in the prevention ot aap te fepartment of vocational tion of | to operate, ‘This force is the ability of the consumer the movie men “absorbed” the two-| riage announcement; but this waslof communicable disease, and that ct he departs ola, which we believe should | to pay, It in the “effective demand” of the law of} soak Se ols ffeil gr pghavend fn ordinary for the reason that it| printers’ ink might well be tacluaal Interest most all of us, With the letter was a card | supply and demand, Supply may be large or small men have not dincovered that the| “ae 20% publicly made until the fitth|in the pharmacopela. Which explained the w Placement Bureau but it matters nothing if there Is no demand ‘ | warts over yet jaan wary of the wedding. | It f# certainly worthy of comment of this department we This bureau co The consumers America are ¢ tin oewe nate he ae pry “ 1 oretessionally apeek that educational oe cote aa . h employers in ng suitable positions demand. st in to may, they are beginning te y or anielxon, wuburbanly|« prime factor and most useft Ween the ages of 14 and 21, and charges no fee for uries It ts in perfect accord, therefore, with the nag Reco —— Lrg ie eg tee clare some of her ideas re marri health standpoint. It has beeo price te services. It is not an employment agency | law of supply and dethand that the silk mills of} eet aaye forgotten the old custom | which are worth thinking over |less in promoting sanitation, for it MEE ond cannct always rush omters, Its | New Engtand are beginning to operate on half tite, | 6 out cigar For thene five years the two first taught the pubjic the necesstty arimary object is to bring the right worker and are preparing to shut down entirely | : idhindiebe maintained neparate studio ay of drainage and sewerage, and that Work tagether by knowing ax much as Able " shirts for workday use are disap Fivery time the city editor hears | ments, have averaged two breakfasts | ries and mosquitoes were the chief yout the requirements of t and caref se | pearing, That mean mon sense in spending what he cone r* ® good story he|& Week together, have never gtven|carritrs of several ever-present com- fecting one for the other.” in returning, The millworkers whe make silk goods laten it to us and insists that we| aM accounting one to the other of the|municable diseases. It bas alse And here is the ter will consequently have to find other employment put it in this column, attributing it) time spent apart, and now make dec-| taught the public, or a great portion anufacturing cottons and linens and Ernie to 6 sage from the public achoola, your | For instance NOW, THEN, MISTER GROG, to some well known man about|!aration that their arrangement! of it, to insist on pure foods. schools. middle-prade ton. The supply of these eamential) [Bo AHeap WITH THE BALLAD — vem Dire with thie vohtey we pis mag that they are peeteetiy | At one time newspapers hesitated . “A business man said to me the other day, ‘I have ommodities will thus be increaged and prices wil) [THe GU@STS CANT B66 rg soln i owing ibuting it o “ye ‘al to tquch the subject of sanitation, Maen In business for 30 years and I have faited in | fall ; yor Caldwe sigue Muent ety pcb bed cong pest-houses, flies and mosquitoes be : Ome thing in which I have very much wanted fo That is the process which muat be followed in| f ne “nthe se = ret be alt cause the editor feared it Waele og mucceed. 1 have not been able to take a boy into eral befe rica cah return te normal wa a oe oo me ore merely | news Experiment proved there was t My employ in the shipping room and graduate him living. The djustment need net entail serious en Ping on ge gr enced Pd bieker element of news says ® my business as a saleaman. | be e 1 have ardships upon workers thrown out of employment led ban 6 where than something that com dione my part, but boys have failed me.’ They can find new work in more necessary indus Bice isd: irs. diutank as ealidved nicl corged every one of his readers inth “I asked, ‘How do you get your boys He an tries. ut, they trust nisze the economic law nes al ‘bites to: the aitein ae overs mately—the public health. © nwered, ‘I put a sign in the window and take any | which now beginning to operate, and accept the} aehaitericy, wrangling over social en.| That is the reason why totay likely appearing boy who comes in.’ Sewer | eugements, one dragging the other|D¢Wspapers have taken up the fight SMo you investigate the sch econ! of the e turn of the long ected consumer ia at Jout and the other going, yet hating 70F the eradication of venereal dis applicant?’ I asked. He answered. ‘No.’ hand. ‘The law of supply and demand works both + ha age . canes 05d are co-operating with I explained to this man that the wayn cages ki United States public health se Save waved him the cost and inconve - Little Edna had been very, very Ft pbdit b- Prag gr ger in ® nation-wide edueationg! cat werimenting with a boy if had aaked the school About the only place where conditions are bad, Her mother instructed her to| SPo.in- of a balance between per.| ten, urging the adoption of ropes About’ the boy before he employed him normal is Mexico.—Baltimore American | ask God's forgivences. control legisiation, the closing rty and domestic ties. How will succeed remains to be wish them luck i] iN Very well,” replied Edna Cald he rg well, fictitious daughter of the may.) 1 or, “but don’t you think it would be houses of prostitution, the segreagm ¥ tion and compulsory treatment of the diseased until they are ne longer “All boys and girls are good for something, altho | they are no more all good for the same thing than - Do Animals Reason? the goods on the merehants’ shelves are all adapted to the same purpose ne schools know boys and | better to keep it in the family?’ | Mim Mrs Huret Danielson, how & menace to the public. Girls because that is theif Job and they have the | eo Jever, calls attention, by this pub pH ss. Opportunity to study them. Despite our’ best en- | ~ e . want | Here's another, attributed to Pa ea pedir Laney pMey.s yraceen What ts good for inseet bites? - r i reason s to igure things out pot acts wel Ford is eavors, there will always be square pees in round Edve! had just returned trom the| Fe undoubtedly many couples who} A. | Stings of mosquitoes, are baw } » end treated by applying a few ot war (of course Edsel didn't go to| have krown to hate each other nim. | treated by applying drops Beles, -but_we must do our best to reduce such a | torether and see what they Involve. To be intelth ao et ent in to be able to do*new thingy successfully Would it not pe to your a © have | Be. matter bow, ch Pi Sighcwclitn ———| war, but that makes no diffe rence in| Ply because of enforced over-inth nS tse ee oe the schools’ valuation of the boy you em One can be intelligent withe reasonte ” aye thin story) and was telling a room | ™4&cy. crane seuay sedate bees, ploy? We are sure it would be to nterest ce eae ol ig lg edi gon Fagen Phelps 4 Il wD om ih fall of muests hin thrilling expert-| Many a fine woman has been|wishs. yellow jackets. etc, remove MC Gey ce gist, because it 10 tape that a | things—to find their way home from some strange enees and adventures. He was elo.|ruined by having her personality pie li This pan " done within hey or girl succeed on his first job, nd he ts hac to know their master's voice, Hut do they | quent and effective; all hung on his | drowned in a molasses ocean of bour + ge os otha a Moomed to failure on a job for which he is neither | "son? words with interest, including Fred. geois sentimentality. Her husband rll aaa harppointed Adapted nor prepared. . | ere tm a test: Put a hungry eat tn a box made | di fictitious first-born son of Edsel. | lives for. her, loves her, works for “KEEP OUR CARD. Call us up when yom need a ’ with a door that she can open easily by/ “Oh, daddy," said Freddie, “1/| her, does everything in the world for! ‘In case there is — pain, apply Shor or giri for part time or full time employment. | thing & wooden button; put some fish outside, and > guess you ain't afraid of anything, | her, except the one thing that would | cold cloths or a solution af, boric track. of The cat w hably serateh Ip excepting muvver.” keep her love alive—that is, go away | acid o Me and let her alone once in, a while Bites from chiggers,” Gane an loeland has ap 1 for memberghip And many 4 genuinely good fellow | etc., which cause very annoying ite ue of Nations. Doesn't, bas been irritated into going wrong | ing eruption should be treated by re want to be left out in the cold by too strenuous and constant dones | moving insect. In the case of chig- , ee of uxoriousness. gers, sterilize a needie point in the THE 1920 VERSION . ‘The golden mean is hard to find. | Mame of a tag and dig the insect Roser red, | Every married pair is seeking it. It|out of the skin dive |is a most delicate problem, to be| To catch a flea, first wet the fim Bugar pearce, worked out almost entirely by the) ger, otherwise it is difficult t hol@ Bis scape Lather the body well with soft soap . or ete personal equation. “Straight is the gate, and few there be that find it." | after exposure to insects and be take a general poem | lays the Indy next door: “Th’ ol ‘i | way cola days t must | Her 's hoping Fannie has. | be mostly quicksliver.” “tzssur REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS nent wRtie’s | kee | “Seattle's boys and girls, trained in @ehools, can make good.” The office of the Placement Bureau is at s02 | [4t her have » Central building. The telephone is E tu t laxt nhe moves the button and gets out ¢ of the fh and put her in ag Lean of Washiogtes. in ‘The Larnest Meteal et 4260 If she reasons she ought to see that the button f Anteciation ta ¢ n the Le | what counts, and get out again easily A : | But whe dopm't. She may nave a Nttle time by Having failed to get in touch with Mars,| sacting to mrntch near the pert of the box when . they might next try to communicate with snr escaped. Hut it is only gradually, thra many | Colonel House—Nashville Banner. | that she learns exactly what to do. 4 |} This is Uke « man lear ¥ # some act of skill.| o 2 oo ineed they are thet animals learn. They do not eo Te a Or Is It Just ‘Try as hard as they please, It seems imponsdble Wood missed the roar and strain of war, fer cll producers to keep more than a jump ahead | but Johnson is doing hia best to show him Sh ‘ wd MEME Cikuacptinn. © Tateee, it So fast the Ure | Oey nen ig ortsightedness? When American oil wells can even maintain » ‘ how it felt.—Baltimore Sun. . | 1m oréer to intreduce eur new (whalebone) plate, which is the Nentet : With the growing of! demasds. Yes, of course, the | -———— ~ 7 The English war office reports the| M4 strongest plate Known, covers very little o! the, root ot th th | suutofobile is respons | Accident, sickness, bad busi- Sis of @ auitior ‘Wee 'side tecaehioad You, can bite ‘corn off the cob; guarames Viole 9 . Indications péint to a 1920 consumption totaling / Who Kille Killed the I B ar? . ness or a lost job may put you all his relations. Mebbylhe's made a) EXAMINATION FREE $95 million barrels of crude oll. In 191% the world in the “tough luck” class any jot of money. That causes most men | Feb Set Terth, Pink Gum.... entire of] output was but 514 million barrels. The | rare day. to forget ‘em. | Set Teeth, Whalebone Rubber.. American consumption is 65 milion greater this year | Remember that old Third Reader story of the ay. » Dhol og “than last; It ts 175 million barrels greater than 1916. | Yankee farmer who, from the security of the Indoors, | “At the same time American production has swelled. | directed his wife in her battle with the hunery bear | ; i While consumption in four years has increased 54 | upon the doorstep? But just a little * per cent, production of crode of] in the United Stat a hy hy wife sh the bear? aegypti ah la adbalage org RM toed oat Retr png FORESIGHT MEANS ' | What has become of the planet | lbridgewerk that some astronomer discovered but | Amalgam Fifiing . waid it was no far awny it couldn’t| be sean thro the most powerful tele | ncope? morsiag L t teeth same day. : | And what haw be eee Test of Mort cf our sy mate sroangetlé pe ew to who used to my, “Stand by the preal-| (int, Sai Thom work ie still Gung rood satisfaction. | dent? |p tients rk. en coming to our office, | eee you are . Bs hin ag with you. Mexico has another revolution, but | Open Sundays From ® te 12 for Werking People we have be re, bare tron unatie 0 aucover! * — QHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS __ represent + 307 UNIVERSITY sT. Oppecite Fraser-Paterson on PAINLESS EXTRACTION _ AU work guarantecd for &, Ms me Have imapronaian takes mi by an increase of 320 per cent in of? imported | “Ma and Betsy, WE killed th’ biar® INSURANCE from Mefico. Palmer's crew elaims credit for the recent 20 per “At this rate of consumption It is clear.” remarks | cent cut in retall prices against any much calamity. fe No matter how small the the Wall Street Journal, “that the United States “Due to campaign against profiteering.” asserts Mmust rely mainly on Mexico to make up its oi! | that same little champien claimer requirements.” The agricultural department reports indications ¢ amount you can wave from your pay envelope or mb ary, place it regularly with this strong Savings and Loan Asmociation and jet ‘tough luck” and the world go by. Mexico is now shipping off at the rate of 120 million | a fair wheat crop. barrels yearly, compared with shipments of less than | Due to the ¢ 9 million barrels tn 1919 | Ob. yeu: Palme: es partment ef justice? | killed the biart Polk Was the First “Dark Horse” | President; Gen. Jackson’s Man? Eéitor’s Note.—This is the first “with one ere on his final home to country and her hopes of prosperity @f ten articles on national don- which he was doubtiess rapidly glid- bad conveyed to Butler the fact that ventions’ history, The next ar. = ing. and with the other fixed o@ bis Van Buren was his “first choice,” but ticle tells about the MeKiniey " gy that he foresaw “pomnibie failure” to ¢ Van Buren and hoped PUGET SOUND SAVINGS and LOAN om SS ate Tatty eye fo ASSOCIATION BY GILSON GARDNER 4 | mony” on some other candidate Where Pike Street (Who has reported every national po- | All this was written in a letter! » - Crosses Third |which Butler read to the convention and the harmony wave rose and Joverswept the convention there was a “stampede o Fy in fe dean of Washington newspaper “writers, and who will report the 1920 Rational conventions for The Star.) | Congreas had appropriated $30,000 | jto test the invention of an al! ~ instrument and this National conventions are of two Kinds, fixed and “dark horse.” The fixed convention is one where the @uteome is predetermined, like the McKinley conventi 396, when there is no real contest d no dra ped to run @ wire be-| » Washington and Baltimore by | jwhich communication was main-| | tained for three da: before the con. | vention met I ry half hour the! | little machine in the end of the * Matic action d A “dark-horse” convention is a |capitol reported the progress of the| convention 40 miles away, and bul-/ 2=0=6=6 Meetigg of uninstructed or unpledged j Gelegates who are liable to do any j thing. 4 The first dark-horte convention ever held in the United States was that which nominated James K Polk jetins were posted on the wails of fm 1844. Since then there have been |the rotunda and were watched with | seven famous dark-horse cc ntions, jeacer Interest by members of the| Notably that which named Garfield houge and senate | | from one of these bulletins | tor Silas Wright learned of nomination aa vice president, and! | being angry that the convention bad | betrayed Van Buren and nominated | | Polk, he used the telegraph to send | jan emphatic refusal to accept the| nomination MOTHER! | “California Syrup of Figs’ Child’s Best Laxative fm 1880, and that which named Cleve Jand in 1884 Democratic conventions are more liable to be dark horses than repub. lican conventions. This is on account of the well known “two-thirds rule Which requires that the convention must poll two-thirds of its delegates before any candidate is chosen ‘Thus it may happen that a candi @ate may have a full majority of the ‘yotes in a democratic convention and he defeated finally by some dark horse. This was the case with Van Buren in 1844 and © mp Clark in B= 1912. Van Buren went into the con Ventién with a majority of 26 of the delegates, but was defeated after a long wrangle by James K. Polk,} whose name had not been mertioned before the convention. Van Buren’s wpponent before the convention y General Cass, and it was not until the eighth ballot that Polk began to figure in the bailoting In a dark-horse convention the fa YVorite son candidates generally kill one another off. The bit ness be tween Van Buren and Cass killed them both off, and it became evident before the convention had been long in session that there must be a com Promise, and this gave a chance to bring forward the name of Polk | There is a strong suspicion among the writers of political history that id General Jackson rigged this first @ark-horse convention and that Polk Was his choice. Jackson was a shrewd political raanipulator. Cer tain it i# that when the time came “i i Accept “Camorna’ syrup or rigs! for New York to cast its vote Ben — im, | only 1obk for the name c iifornia Jamin ¥. Butler stepped to the front dames K. Polk, at top, nominee of on the package? then you are sure| and took the delegates into his con pocratic conyention in 1844, th ouf child is having the best and! fidence in regard to « recent visit he| first “dark horse’; James A. Gar-|mout harmless physic for the little Bad made to the “Hermitage,” to\fild, the first republican “dark! stomach, liver and bowels. Children “Which Jackson had retired horse,” nominated and el d in|love its fruity taste. Full directions Butler told the delegates that the! 1840, and Grover Cleveland, demo- (on each bottle, You must say "Cali | President and veteran weneral | cratic “dark horse” in 1641. | fornia” ht “The Quality Coffee 4 of America” Which ever suits your con- venience, you will find the same Quality and Flavor in ONE, THREE or FIVE POUND Vaccum Packed Cans. You SAVE the most when you buy the larger sizes. Every Can Guaranteed M. J. BRANDENSTEIN & CO. Office & Warehouse 313 OCCIDENTAL AVE., SEATTLE. when “delicious and re- freshing” mean the most. ‘Tite Coca-Cota Company ATLANTA. GA.

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